2012 Spring Meeting & 8th Global Congress on Process Safety
(34c) Selective H2S Removal: Case Studies by Using a New Promoter System in Amine Systems
Authors
Title
Selective H2S removal: Case studies by using a new promoter system in amine systems
Abstract
Applications where selective sulfur removal is required have become an important topic over the last decades. Specifically in refineries as well as in natural gas applications, the production of H2S enriched high quality Claus gas has been one of the favored drivers so far. Meanwhile, the requirement for an adjustable CO2 slip, the focus on tighter sulfur specifications along with a high degree of flexibility and savings in energy consumption have gained in importance as well.
The principles of selective removal of H2S with amine-based solvents follow three major routes:
a) various design options and absorber internals, affecting the difference in CO2 and H2S mass transfer kinetics
b) severely hindered amines, controlling the selectivity for H2S removal primarily in the absorber, and
c) generic and promoted tertiary amines, focusing more on the regeneration ability, and thus leading to tighter H2S specifications.
In particular the combination of a) and c) is widespread and the most common option in industry.
Based on some design cases, this paper will describe the possibilities and leverage of selective designs by using a new promoter system for enhanced selective treatment with tertiary amines.